The Atlantic Ocean has a toxic seaweed problem. Now stretching across some...

CNN Climate 8 months ago

The Atlantic Ocean has a toxic seaweed problem. Now stretching across some 5,500 miles of ocean, the annual bloom is more than just an eyesore: Sargassum hurts ecosystems and economies wherever its overgrown arms reach. And they are spreading into Florida's waterways, coating marinas and beaches in the Miami area. As it rots on shore, it emits harmful gases— an infamous stench. It's a blight on beaches that repels tourists during the high-travel season, ultimately hurting towns that rely on tourism to fuel their economy. Read more at the link in our bio. 📷: Quintana Roo Secretary of Ecology and Environment; Ashley Miznazi/The Miami Herald/Tribune News Service/Getty Images; Jose Antonio López-Portillo/UNAM

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 2 hours ago



Growing evidence indicates that sustainable construction is moving from image to measurable performance, driven by biophysical realities and the need to decarbonise the built environment. UN scientists’ warnings over global “water bankruptcy” signal that resource efficiency in construction must expand beyond energy and encompass hydrological limits, demanding that sustainable building design incorporates water reuse, harvesting and budgeting within whole life carbon assessment frameworks. In arid regions, projects adopting eco-design for buildings that work with the landscape demonstrate how sustainable urban development now depends as much on hydrology as on planning codes.

Climate risks are reshaping where and how we build. Rebuilding after landslides in India exposes the environmental impact of construction that ignores ecological baselines, underlining the value of sustainable architecture grounded in hazard mapping and life cycle thinking in construction. Developers integrating resilience and circular economy principles into briefs are showing that sustainable building practices not only improve building lifecycle performance but also reduce the carbon footprint of construction across operations and maintenance.

Variability within the global energy transition complicates embodied carbon reduction. As grid decarbonisation diverges between regions, the embodied carbon in materials and the whole life carbon of similar specifications vary widely. Accurate lifecycle assessment and life cycle cost evaluation now shape procurement more than generic “low-carbon” claims. Projects specifying low embodied carbon materials, renewable building materials and green building products sourced through robust environmental product declarations (EPDs) demonstrate how circular construction strategies can deliver measurable net zero whole life carbon outcomes.

Award-winning housing and commercial redevelopment schemes show low carbon design moving from concept to scale. Clients are replacing outdated stock with energy-efficient buildings verified to BREEAM and BREEAM v7 standards, aiming for net zero carbon buildings with proven carbon footprint reduction. These investments align circular economy in construction goals with verifiable performance, evidencing that green construction and eco-friendly construction are now business imperatives rather than niche ambitions.

For designers and investors, action must focus on embodied carbon control, sustainable material specification, end-of-life reuse in construction and continuous lifecycle assessment of assets. The sector is converging on an integrated model of sustainable building design, life cycle cost transparency and carbon neutral construction that links sustainable design intent to measurable whole life carbon performance. Those who demonstrate resilience, circular economy integration and genuine sustainability in practice will secure approvals, insurance and finance in the new low carbon building economy.

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